Senior Gift Funds Abolition

04-22-2010

Village children pose for the camera during an Erasmus immersion to Uganda intended to raise awareness about human trafficking and child soldiers. Photo by Erika Myszynski

Alongside familiar senior class gifts to expand the
library’s book collection or to purchase an ornamental statue for campus,
paying to train and send slavery abolitionists to Africa to help secure the
release of indentured child workers might be considered unconventional or even
bold.

In fact, it was meant as a kind of billboard of USF’s
values, said USF Assistant Director of Annual and Special Giving Christopher
Anderson ’06, who came up with the idea of a senior gift scholarship intended
to pay for a few highly qualified but fiscally limited underclassmen to
experience how much of the world lives by spending time in a developing
country.

From San Francisco to Uganda

Christina Hebets and Hannah Mora weren’t the only USF
students to travel to Africa in the summer of 2009.

USF’s Erasmus living-learning community, which chooses a
different social plight to research in-depth and work on behalf of each year,
sent 11 students to Uganda for more than two weeks to visit with U.S. Embassy and
Jesuit officials, nonprofit leaders working on behalf of victims of human
trafficking, and to talk with some of those who managed to escape slavery to
start new lives.

“Uganda, which has experienced two-decades of civil war, was
selected because we were studying human trafficking and particularly child
soldiers in support of the Not For Sale Campaign,” said Mike Duffy, director of
USF’s Joan and Ralph Lane Center for Catholic Studies and Social Thought and an
Erasmus faculty adviser.

“In the northern part of Uganda, near Gulu, we were
fortunate enough to visit an Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camp, where we
saw first hand the dire situations under which people were living,” said USF
junior Annabel Cassady, a politics major and the USF Not For Sale Campaign Club
president.

Junior Erika Myszynski, an Erasmus Community student, has produced
a 17-minute documentary, Ugandan Days,
about her experience in the East African country to be submitted to film
festivals. "My primary method of involvement has
been spreading awareness and creating public concern that ultimately
perpetuates action," said Myszynski, an international relations
major and an aspiring journalist.

“The idea was to provide current students with the
opportunity to fund scholarships and give back to students following in their
footsteps,” said Anderson, who developed the idea in consultation with the scholarship’s
inaugural 2008 senior class, University Ministry, and the Not For Sale Campaign,
the nonprofit chosen to coordinate the scholarship winners’ training and
travel.

Seniors rallied behind the idea, donating about $10,000, the
most ever contributed as a senior gift. The money paid for the training and
travel of two USF students to conduct research on human trafficking and work as
abolitionists during the summer of 2009, Anderson said.

It was so successful, the scholarship is underway again this
year.

“This is all amazing!” wrote sociology major Christina
Hebets ’08 in an e-mail during her two-week trip to a region near Lake Volta in
Ghana last July. “We spent a week in Kete-Krachi and ‘rescued’ five children
who all came back down to Tema with us.”

“Rescued,” as she learned, can be a loaded word among a
fishing culture that has made a livelihood buying children as workers for
decades. In fact, the children were freely released by their owners after
members of the nonprofit, a Not For Sale Campaign affiliate, that Hebets
volunteered with explained to the fishermen that what they were doing was
illegal.

Thanks in large part to the scholarship, which not only paid
for her travels but for her training and certification as a human trafficking
investigator, Hebets’ interest in the developing world grew, leading her to
land a job as the Not For Sale Campaign’s international operations manager. She
is also a University Ministry resident ministry intern on campus, where she is
able to share her experiences with current USF students.

Senior Hannah Mora was the other recipient of the 2008
senior class gift scholarship. “In Uganda, I worked with Not For Sale to
create a coalition of non-governmental organizations (GUSCO, Kids in
Need) and representatives of law enforcement to work together effectively
in order to address the issue of human trafficking within the country,” Mora
said.

A theology and religious studies major and a Catholic
studies and social thought minor, Mora also helped map instances of human
trafficking using GPS.

“Reading the cases of these people allowed me to look into
personal stories and recognize the traumatic effects that the global slave
trade has on these women and children,” said Mora, who was in northern
Uganda where decades of civil war have led to children being used as soldiers.